UnitedxCBD
  • Home
  • Science & Medicine
  • Cultivation
  • Edibles & Processing
  • Business Analysis
  • Culture & Industry
  • Regulation
  • Videos
  • Interviews
  • Events
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Science & Medicine
  • Cultivation
  • Edibles & Processing
  • Business Analysis
  • Culture & Industry
  • Regulation
  • Videos
  • Interviews
  • Events
No Result
View All Result
UnitedxCBD
No Result
View All Result
Home Business Analysis

How a year of COVID-19 forced positive change for cannabis retailers

admin by admin
March 17, 2021
in Business Analysis
0
How a year of COVID-19 forced positive change for cannabis retailers
0
SHARES
0
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


Despite challenges such as rapid regulatory change, shifting public-health demands and economic uncertainty, cannabis retailers say the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic has driven beneficial changes to their business models and motivated regulators to permit new ways of serving customers.

Those new services range from online ordering to home delivery and curbside pickup to even drive-thru windows, all of which are helping cannabis retailers maintain and even grow sales during the pandemic.

“I think it’s been positive,” Talley Wettlaufer, senior vice president of retail at cannabis multistate operator Curaleaf, told Marijuana Business Daily.

“From a retail-experience standpoint, it has asked us to adapt and build more ways for us to deliver an outstanding customer experience and continue to meet our customers and patients wherever they are.”

Those adaptations have included:

  • Launching online cannabis sales for pickup or delivery, where allowed by regulators.
  • Adjusting to new purchasing trends, such as a preference for stocking up on bulk products when shopping trips are less frequent.

With vaccination rates increasing and the end of the coronavirus crisis in sight, cannabis retail operators are now waiting to see whether consumers’ pandemic-era shopping habits will persist, and some retailers told MJBizDaily they anticipate that at least some of those trends are here to stay.

“It’s important for us to offer online and delivery where we can but also have an exceptional in-store experience,” Wettlaufer said.

Propelling a pivot to e-commerce

The COVID-19 pandemic served as a catalyst that accelerated the marijuana retail sector’s shift toward e-commerce, said Alexis Mora, head of marketing at California dispensary chain Harborside.

Serendipitously, Harborside launched online ordering about a month before public-health-spurred lockdowns arrived in March 2020.

“When March hit, our curbside and delivery were outpacing, in terms of our retail channels, our in-store sales by about 30% to 40%,” Mora said.

Even though online ordering was already the norm for many other retail sectors, Curaleaf’s Wettlaufer observed that cannabis retailers, as a whole, were somewhat behind the curve in adopting e-commerce.

“Had there not been a global pandemic, I think it probably would have been slower to take off than it did within the last year, where people really had to adjust and use technology,” she said.

Regulated marijuana stores in the United States and Canada are generally limited to serving a given jurisdiction, so cannabis e-commerce still doesn’t look like Amazon or eBay. Legal interstate and international cannabis e-commerce remain goals for the future.

But shoppers have shown an appetite for buying cannabis online locally and getting it via home deliveries, where allowed, or through curbside and in-store pickup.

In some areas, the pandemic has helped marijuana e-commerce pair successfully with a quintessentially American innovation: the drive-thru window.

Harborside’s Desert Hot Springs dispensary opened its drive-thru window in late 2019, and Mora said roughly 70% of customers at that location use the service.

In neighboring Arizona, the drive-thru window at The Mint Dispensary’s Tempe location got off to a slow start with “maybe a handful of orders a day” when it debuted in September 2020, said co-founder and CEO Eivan Shahara.

Now, he said, more than 200 drive-thru tickets are served on a typical Friday.

Shahara expects the drive-thru will remain popular even after the pandemic subsides, “and we believe it is going to continue to grow.”

“We’re actually in the process of adding a second drive-thru window, just to keep up with demand,” he added.

Shifting spending patterns, new customers

Retail sales of cannabis have grown impressively during the pandemic, helping marijuana stores avoid the sustained drop in demand that plagued some other retail sectors.

But marijuana shoppers also adjusted their buying habits in response to the pandemic, with data showing a trend toward shopping less often but spending more on each trip.

“As people were more concerned about contagiousness, they didn’t show up to the stores at the same rate, and so when they did show up to the stores, they did buy in larger quantities,” explained Steve White, CEO of marijuana MSO Harvest Health & Recreation.

Mora said Harborside has seen strong performance from bulk flower formats, particularly 14-gram packages, along with shifts in other category trends.

“People aren’t necessarily buying 1-gram pre-rolls, because people aren’t sharing joints anymore,” she said.

“So, what you’re seeing in terms of trends are, your ‘dog-walkers’ which are your 0.3- or 0.5-(gram) pre-roll packs, where you’re buying a pack and it’s, ‘One for (my) friend, one for me.’”

At Curaleaf, Wettlaufer said the frequency of customer visits has remained “fairly consistent” throughout the pandemic. But she believes the pandemic did help accelerate the arrival of new customers, particularly since many marijuana stores have been recognized as an essential service.

“It’s obviously been a very stressful time, there’s been a lot of people dealing with a lot, and people’s health and wellness has been (at) the forefront of their mind.”

Other external factors also likely drove increased marijuana sales during the pandemic, pointed out Jaclynn Pehota, who, as executive director of the Association of Canadian Cannabis Retailers, represents a group of mostly independent marijuana retailers in British Columbia.

For example, she observed, Canada’s 2020 run-up in cannabis sales correlated not only with the pandemic but also with a significant increase in licensed cannabis stores in major markets such as Ontario.

“But what I have heard anecdotally, from members of the public, is that they think twice about their source of cannabis in a way that they have not had to think about before the pandemic,” Pehota said.

As was done in many U.S. markets, regulators in British Columbia opened up new options for cannabis retailers during the pandemic by allowing online payments for in-store pickup.

British Columbia has a long history of illicit marijuana cultivation, and Pehota said the unregulated market is still thriving.

She’s hopeful the provincial government sees regulated cannabis e-commerce as more than just a temporary, pandemic-era tool and allows private-sector retailers to offer delivery.

“I suspect that our regulators are looking at delivery as a mechanism to compete with the unregulated market, as well as a measure to assist with the prevention of community spread, which, to me, would imply that is going to be a measure that is going to continue into our new normal.”

Looking to the future

Wettlaufer of Curaleaf expects the post-pandemic future of cannabis retail to balance the convenience of online shopping with the high-touch experience of in-store shopping, in line with consumer desires.

“There are some days that you want to browse, and have a conversation, and discover, and be a true shopper – and there are some days where you just want to buy and you want to be fast and frictionless,” she said.

As concern about COVID-19 has subsided, Harvest CEO Steve White said he’s observed consumers returning to stores more often and buying less when they do.

Still, he suspects, “we’re not going to shift all the way back to the pre-COVID behaviors, because we formed new habits over the last year.”

White views the pandemic as a test of cannabis businesses’ strength, offering an analogy by way of a house.

“COVID is one of the many unforeseen weather patterns that test the strength of your house,” he said.

“So, for all of us who have endured it, it may have been true that there were cracks that were exposed in the process – but, the next time, we will be prepared for exactly that same thing to happen again.

“Of course, it will not ever happen again in the exact same way,” White continued.

“But in the process, what you’ve done is you have fortified your foundation and your walls to ensure that other types of unforeseen weather are not going to damage your structure.”

Solomon Israel can be reached at [email protected].



Source link

admin

admin

Related Posts

Marijuana foes seek to impose THC potency caps to curb industry’s growth
Business Analysis

Marijuana foes seek to impose THC potency caps to curb industry’s growth

March 25, 2021
Where in America is marijuana still entirely illegal?
Business Analysis

Where in America is marijuana still entirely illegal?

March 24, 2021
Adult-use marijuana basket composition highlights consumer buying trends in 2020
Business Analysis

Adult-use marijuana basket composition highlights consumer buying trends in 2020

March 23, 2021
Next Post
7 rainbow-themed products you’ll actually want to buy

7 rainbow-themed products you'll actually want to buy

Regulators crack down on Michigan credit union’s marijuana banking

Regulators crack down on Michigan credit union's marijuana banking

23 things I miss about pre-pandemic weed life

23 things I miss about pre-pandemic weed life

Follow Us

  • 22M Fans
  • 85 Followers
  • 27.7k Followers
  • 73.1k Subscribers

Recommended

Everything you need to know about the Dr. Dabber switch

Everything you need to know about the Dr. Dabber switch

5 months ago
7 weed strains for winter hibernation

7 weed strains for winter hibernation

3 months ago
The Roll-up #183: Plant seeds and get that Elev8 mindset

The Roll-up #183: Plant seeds and get that Elev8 mindset

2 months ago
San Diego County starts work on marijuana social equity program

San Diego County starts work on marijuana social equity program

3 months ago

Instagram

  • Photo by  iantehphotography   That Time  It doesn   t seem so long ago that I was in Saint-Malo  France  watching these children take exuberant flying leaps off a diving platform into the sea   their bodies striking dynamic poses while momentarily suspended  then hurtling through the air and into the cold water  Splash  It was another world and a different time  when crowds weren t considered a threat to one s health  And traveling didn t feel like a distant memory  How that has changed  at least for a while longer  That summer  when I toured this historic walled port on the northwestern coast of France   I can almost feel the sand beneath my feet and smell the salty air again   halcyondays  precovid19  stmalo  france
  • Photo by  andreabruce   Mayor Maria Patricia Arce Guzman  48  of Vinto  Bolivia  was attacked during violent protests after the 2019 election  She believes she was targeted because she s a woman and because she supports female empowerment programs   Take a look at the June 2020 issue and the story  Taking the Lead   for which I photographed the inspiring women of Bolivia  New Zealand  Iraq  and Afghanistan who have made huge gains in achieving political power  but still face cultural resistance  and even violence  as their influence increases  Story was written by Rania Abouzeid  Follow me  andreabruce for more photos and stories   Check out Nat Geo s link in bio for more on this story
  • National Geographic long has told the story of the human journey  documenting both our successes and some of our darkest hours  This is one of those times  when we need a bright light on truth  We remain committed to shining  that  light on the issue of race in America  exploring inequality and discrimination  and hope our storytelling can build understanding and help lead to justice      These images  were  photographed by  waynelawrence for Nat Geo   s 2018 Race issue    We teamed up with  ESPN   s  The Undefeated to ask  African Americans and Latinos  across the U S  what it   s like to be racially profiled during a traffic stop  and the ripple effect such incidents can have on families and communities
  • Photos by David Guttenfelder  dguttenfelder   The family of George Floyd grieves on May 30  2020  at the spot where he died in police custody  Thousands of supporters gathered to offer their support  play music  and give lectures
  • Photo by David Guttenfelder  dguttenfelder   Datelle Straub  Avery Lewis  and Titan Harness-Reed arrive at the Minneapolis protest wearing their 2020 graduation caps and gowns from Patrick Henry High School  They had a virtual ceremony due to COVID-19     Because of COVID we couldn   t walk the stage  so we decided to put our robes on to show that there is black excellence in our community  And we walked the streets as our stage and protested     Straub said  When he saw police approaching  he lifted his diploma     As we were walking  cops jumped out of a van and aimed their guns at me and my friends  And put a red dot on our chests  It   s just frustrating that they are OK with killing the future
  • Photo by  edkashi   Andr   Sayegh  mayor of Paterson  and his wife  Farhanna Sayegh  are seen with two of their three children  Sophia and Kayla  at their Paterson home  in New Jersey  Mayor Sayegh and the first lady are both survivors of the COVID-19 virus  Since the pandemic hit in March  they have recorded and broadcast a weekly show called  Silk City Story Time   in which to they read children   s books to residents  Follow me  edkashi for more from  RisingToTheCall  highlighting stories within New Jersey   wewillprevail  lifeduringcorona  newjersey  gardenstate
  • Photo by  acacia johnson   A brown bear nurses her cubs on the shore of Chinitna Bay  a renowned brown bear viewing area in Alaska s Lake Clark National Park and Preserve  Here  large numbers of brown bears gather to graze on sedge grass  fish for salmon  and dig for clams   and people come from all over the world to watch them  But the bears are endangered by the proposed Pebble Mine  which would risk poisoning the ecosystem and involve a sprawling transport corridor within these bears  wandering ranges  Follow me at  acacia johnson to learn more about protecting this remarkable wilderness   alaska  brownbears  pebblemine  Check out Nat Geo s link in bio for more on this story
  • Photo by Trevor Frost  tbfrost   A green striped vine snake coils in the hands of a herpetologist at  hojanueva in the Peruvian Amazon  Snakes are more complex and intelligent than most of us think  Luckily science is beginning to show this  A new study published in the journal  Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology suggests garter snakes  are surprisingly social  forming  friendships  with fellow serpents   One thing is for sure  we still have so much to learn about our world  especially the intelligence of nonhuman animals  Head over to  tbfrost to see more photos of snakes
  • Photo by Muhammed Muheisen  mmuheisen   Last January I captured this image of the Dome of the Rock while visiting Al-Aqsa Mosque  the third holiest site in Islam  in Jerusalem   s Old City  For more photos and videos from different parts of the world  follow me  mmuheisen and  mmuheisenpublic   muhammedmuheisen

Categories

  • Business Analysis
  • Cultivation
  • Culture & Industry
  • Edibles & Processing
  • Regulation
  • Science & Medicine
No Result
View All Result

Highlights

4 weed products Leather Storrs of Cooked With Cannabis can’t live without

How to watch Weedmaps’ “Even Higher Together” virtual event this 4/20

Tweed’s got all your favourite strains this 420

Just desserts: The Cookies and Cakes family genealogy

Deadheads rejoice: Garcia Hand Picked is coming to the East Coast

New York weed legalization attempts to end chronic racial disparities

Trending

The California pre-roll battle royale 2021
Science & Medicine

The California pre-roll battle royale 2021

by admin
April 17, 2021
0

I think all of us in California can agree: buying a good dispensary pre-roll can feel...

8 new weed products you should try from PLUS, Houseplant, High Life Farms, and more

8 new weed products you should try from PLUS, Houseplant, High Life Farms, and more

April 16, 2021
Must-have 420 accessories based on your stoner persona

Must-have 420 accessories based on your stoner persona

April 16, 2021
4 weed products Leather Storrs of Cooked With Cannabis can’t live without

4 weed products Leather Storrs of Cooked With Cannabis can’t live without

April 16, 2021
How to watch Weedmaps’ “Even Higher Together” virtual event this 4/20

How to watch Weedmaps’ “Even Higher Together” virtual event this 4/20

April 16, 2021

We publish a comprehensive news feed covering all news relevant to the cannabis, covering main industry news, politics and regulation as well as consumer-level “news you can use” (practical stuff), including handy DIY tips, links to useful tools, unbiased reviews and opinions revolving around cannabis.

Learn more

Recent News

  • The California pre-roll battle royale 2021 April 17, 2021
  • 8 new weed products you should try from PLUS, Houseplant, High Life Farms, and more April 16, 2021
  • Must-have 420 accessories based on your stoner persona April 16, 2021
  • Home
  • Science & Medicine
  • Cultivation
  • Edibles & Processing
  • Business Analysis
  • Culture & Industry
  • Regulation
  • Videos
  • Interviews
  • Events

Sign Up For Our Newsletter

© 2020 unitedxcbd.com

Advertise | Privacy Policy  | Contact Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Science & Medicine
  • Cultivation
  • Edibles & Processing
  • Business Analysis
  • Culture & Industry
  • Regulation
  • Videos
  • Interviews
  • Events

© 2020 unitedxcbd.com